Saracens Women
Saracens Women (/ˈsærəsənz/) are an English women's rugby union club based in Hendon, London. They were established in 1989 and currently play in Premiership Women's Rugby, the top level competition of women's rugby in the country.[8] Saracens are the most successful team in the history of the Premier 15s, having won the league a record three times – in 2017–18, 2018–19 and 2021–22. They are also the women's team of Saracens Amateurs, who themselves are affiliated to Premiership Rugby team Saracens.
Full name | Saracens Women | ||
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Union | Middlesex RFU | ||
Nickname(s) | Sarries, Women in Black, Wolf Pack | ||
Emblem(s) | Star and crescent | ||
Founded | 1989 | ||
Location | Hendon, Greater London, England | ||
Ground(s) | StoneX Stadium (Capacity: 10,500[lower-alpha 1]) | ||
Chairman | Neil Golding | ||
CEO | Lucy Wray | ||
Director of Rugby | Alex Austerberry[1] | ||
Coach(es) | Lewis Sones[2] Mouritz Botha[3] Duncan Taylor[4] | ||
Captain(s) | Lotte Clapp[5] Marlie Packer[6] | ||
Most appearances | Sonia Green[7] 300+ (All Competitions) | ||
League(s) | Premiership Women's Rugby | ||
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Largest win | |||
Saracens 104–0 DMP Durham Sharks (Barnet Copthall, London, England) 9 January 2022 | |||
Largest defeat | |||
Saracens 7–53 Gloucester-Hartpury (Barnet Copthall, London, England) 10 December 2022 | |||
Official website | |||
www | |||
Current season |
History
Saracens Women were originally founded in 1989 by a group of nine players – which included England internationals Emma Mitchell, Janis Ross and Sam Robson, and Wales internationals Amanda Bennett and Liza Burgess – who had identified a need for another women's rugby club in north London.[9] The founding members gained approval to establish the team, after agreeing to assist with the commercial operations of the Saracens men's team, who had just been promoted into the top flight for the 1989–90 season.[10] In their debut season, they won the second division and achieved promotion to the Women's Premiership for the 1990–91 season. The team then claimed their first silverware at the national sevens tournament in 1990, and earned a total of 17 trophies over the ensuing decade, including domestic trebles in 1993 and 1998.[9]
Upon entering the new millennium, Saracens Women were crowned Premiership champions in 2000, before new coaching staff were appointed in 2001, headed by former Saracens men's player Lee Adamson and club co-founder Amanda Bennett.[11] Adamson held both coaching and administrative positions at Saracens, until he departed in 2007 to coach the Scotland women's national rugby union team.[12] The team won the league again in 2002, under the captaincy of England international Claire Frost, and then achieved a sequence of four consecutive titles between 2006 and 2009.[13] Throughout those four years, Saracens remained unbeaten in the competition – a feat not achieved before or since at the top level of English women's rugby.[11] Prominent players during this period included England's most capped hooker Amy Garnett and flanker Maggie Alphonsi, who played her entire career at Saracens and was later named a Member of the Order of the British Empire for services to rugby.[14]
Off the back of this dominant spell, Saracens Women went five years without silverware, recording three second-place finishes in the league. In 2014, Rob Cain was installed as head coach, and the club proceeded to achieve a league and cup double in 2015.[15] Cain continued as head coach through to the launch of the Premier 15s, after which he left to take the helm of the United States women's national rugby union team in 2018.[16] Saracens secured the 2017–18 Premier 15s title, following a season notable for the breakthrough of a new generation of future England internationals who graduated through the club's academy pathway via Welwyn RFC, including prop Hannah Botterman and half-backs Zoe Harrison, Helena Rowland and Ella Wyrwas.[17]
Led by new head coach Alex Austerberry and captain Lotte Clapp, Saracens Women cemented themselves as the dominant team in the Premier 15s, which operated as the highest level of women's domestic rugby union competition in England between 2017 and 2023, until it was rebranded as Premiership Women's Rugby.[18] During this period, the club won the title in 2018, 2019 and 2022, while also achieving five consecutive first-place finishes in the regular season league tables.[19] In September 2019, Saracens also announced that it would double its financial investment in the women's team, in addition to increasing alignment with the resources attached to the men's squad.[20]
Until 2014, Saracens Women played their home games at Bramley Sports Ground in Enfield, London, and occasionally at Vicarage Road – the home of Watford FC – when the Saracens men, to whom they are affiliated, moved there in 1997. Subsequently, Saracens Women reached an agreement to play home matches at the men's home ground, StoneX Stadium, in Hendon. This ground continues to be their home ground for Premiership Women's Rugby fixtures.
Historically, the club has held rivalries with fellow London sides Richmond and Wasps.[21] In more recent years, their main rivals have been Harlequins, with the two teams contesting three consecutive Premier 15s finals between 2018 and 2021.[22] Since the 2020–21 season, they have competed in an annual showpiece match, known as The Duel.[23]
Current squad
The Saracens Women senior squad for the 2023–24 season is:[24]
Note: Flags indicate national union under World Rugby eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-World Rugby nationality.
Note: Players listed in bold have received at least one senior international test cap.
Academy squad
The Saracens Women academy squad for the 2023–24 season is:[24]
Note: Flags indicate national union under World Rugby eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-World Rugby nationality.
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Club staff
The current Saracens senior management and coaching staff is as follows:
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Notable former coaches
The following former Saracens Women coaches have gone on to serve in high-profile positions at international level, or at other top-tier clubs in the women's or men's game:
- Lee Adamson (head coach 2001–07)
- Scotland women's head coach 2007–08
- Rob Cain (director of rugby / head coach 2014–18)
- United States women's head coach 2018–22
- Juan Figallo (forwards coach 2021–23)
- Saracens men's scrum / academy transition coach 2023–
Notable players
Rugby World Cup
The following players have been selected to represent their national teams at the Rugby World Cup while at Saracens (tournament winners are listed in bold):[32]
Tournament | Host nation | Number selected | England players | Other national team players |
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1991 | Wales | 5 | Emma Mitchell, Jane Mitchell, Janis Ross |
Amanda Bennett, Liza Burgess |
1994 | Scotland | 8 | Karen Almond (c), Annie Cole, Emma Mitchell, Jane Mitchell, Janis Ross |
Amanda Bennett, Liza Burgess Michelle Cave |
1998 | Netherlands | 15 | Susie Appleby, Helen Clayton, Trudi Collins, Maxine Edwards, Claire Frost, Claire Green, Emma Mitchell, Teresa O'Reilly, Nicky Ponsford, Janis Ross |
Geraldine Baylis, Liza Burgess, Claire Donovan, Eleanor Green Michelle Cave |
2002 | Spain | 9 | Helen Clayton, Assunta de Biase, Maxine Edwards, Claire Frost, Amy Garnett, Emma Mitchell Teresa O'Reilly, Jenny Phillips |
Leslie Cripps |
2006 | Canada | 6 | Maggie Alphonsi, Karen Andrew, Rachael Burford, Helen Clayton, Amy Garnett |
Leslie Cripps |
2010 | England | 5 | Maggie Alphonsi, Charlotte Barras, Amy Garnett |
Leslie Cripps (c), Sarah Ulmer |
2014 | France | 3 | Maggie Alphonsi | Kerrie-Ann Craddock, Hannah Casey |
2017 | Ireland | 7 | Poppy Cleall, Vicky Fleetwood, Marlie Packer, Emily Scott |
Olivia DeMerchant Valeria Fedrighi Jeanina Loyola |
2022 | New Zealand | 20 | Holly Aitchison, Hannah Botterman, Jess Breach, Poppy Cleall, Zoe Harrison, Leanne Infante, Sarah McKenna, Marlie Packer |
Georgia Evans, Kat Evans, Donna Rose Coreen Grant, Louise McMillan, Jodie Rettie Alysha Corrigan, Alex Ellis Lotte Clapp, Alev Kelter Catha Jacobs Rachel Laqeretabua |
International players
The following former Saracens Women players represented their respective national test or sevens teams during their rugby union career:
England
- Holly Aitchison
- Claire Allan
- Karen Almond
- Maggie Alphonsi
- Karen Andrew
- Susie Appleby
- Katie Ball
- Charlotte Barras
- Ellie Boatman
- Hannah Botterman
- Rachael Burford
- Janice Byford
- Mackenzie Carson
- Lauren Cattell
- Rocky Clark
- Helen Clayton
- Bryony Cleall
- Annie Cole
- Trudi Collins
- Assunta de Biase
- Maxine Edwards
- Vicky Fleetwood
- Deborah Fleming
- Claire Frost
- Amy Garnett
- Claire Green
- Georgina Gulliver
- Eloise Hayward
- Chantelle Miell
- Emma Mitchell
- Jane Mitchell
- Teresa O'Reilly
- Ellena Perry
- Jenny Phillips
- Nicky Ponsford
- Janis Ross
- Helena Rowland
- Emily Scott
- Tamara Taylor
- Emma Uren
Britain and Ireland
- Kerrie-Ann Craddock
- Emma Swords
- Michelle Cave
- Lisa Martin
- Jodie Rettie
- Geraldine Baylis
- Amanda Bennett
- Liza Burgess
- Rebecca De Filippo
- Claire Donovan
- Kat Evans
- Eleanor Green
- Louise Horgan
- Jade Knight
Other nations
- Alysha Corrigan
- Leslie Cripps
- Olivia DeMerchant
- Alex Ellis
- Mandy Marchak
- Julia Sugawara
- Sarah Ulmer
- Nina Vistisen
- Rachel Laqeretabua
- Séraphine Okemba
- Valeria Fedrighi
- Samantha Martinez-Gion
- Tessa Wijmans
- Catha Jacobs
- Emilie Bydwell
- Alev Kelter
- Carly Waters
Club captains
The following players have held the position of Saracens Women club captain:[33][34][35][36]
- 1989–1992 - Liza Burgess
- 1993–1995 - Katie Ball
- 1995–1997 - Janis Ross
- 1997–1998 - Janice Byford
- 1998–2002 - Claire Frost
- 2002–2004 - Helen Clayton
- 2005–2007 - Leslie Cripps
- 2007–2009 - Amy Garnett
- 2010–2012 - Louise Horgan
- 2012–2015 - Maggie Alphonsi
- 2015–2017 - Sonia Green
- 2017–present - Lotte Clapp
Personnel honours and records
World Rugby Awards
The following Saracens players have earned recognition at the World Rugby Awards (presented annually since 2001):[37][38]
Player (X) | Name of the player and number of times that they had been nominated for the award at that point (if more than one) |
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Six Nations Championship Awards
The following players have been named in the Women's Six Nations Player of the Championship or Team of the Championship shortlists while at Saracens:
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Premiership Women's Rugby Awards
The following Saracens players have been named in the annual Premiership Women's Rugby awards:[47]
Player (X) | Name of the player and number of times that they had been nominated for the award at that point (if more than one) |
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§ | Denotes that the club was also the winner of the Premiership Women's Rugby competition during the same season |
† | Denotes that the club was also the runner-up of the Premiership Women's Rugby competition during the same season |
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Rugby Players' Association Awards
The following Saracens players have achieved recognition at the annual RPA Awards:[48][49][50]
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End-of-season club awards
The following Saracens players have earned recognition at the club's annual Big Bash end-of-season awards:[56][57][58][59][60]
Season | Players' Player of the Season | Coaches' Player of the Season | Supporters' Player of the Season | Captain's Player of the Season |
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2018–19§ | Sarah McKenna | Rosie Galligan | Poppy Cleall | — |
2022–23 | Sharifa Kasolo | Georgia Evans | Poppy Cleall (2) | Louise McMillan |
Top scorers
The following lists denote the top try scorers and top point scorers for Saracens in recent Women's Premiership and Premier 15s seasons:
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Club honours
Saracens Women
- Women's Premiership
- Premier 15s
- Allianz Cup
- Runners–Up: (1) 2022–23
- National Cup
- Champions: (6) 1990–91, 1992–93, 1995–96, 1996–97, 1997–98, 1998–99[73]
- Runners–Up: (2) 1991–92, 1993–94
Saracens Women IIs
Saracens Women 7s
Season summaries
League | Cup | |||||
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Season | Competition | Position | Points | Play–offs | Competition | Performance |
2002–03 | Women's Premiership | 3rd | 16 | N/A | No competition | N/A |
2003–04 | Women's Premiership | 2nd | 57 | |||
2004–05 | Women's Premiership | 3rd | 49 | |||
2005–06 | Women's Premiership | 1st | 61 | |||
2006–07 | Women's Premiership | 1st | ||||
2007–08 | Women's Premiership | 1st | 52 | |||
2008–09 | Women's Premiership | 1st | ||||
2009–10 | Women's Premiership | 2nd | 55 | |||
2010–11 | Women's Premiership | 4th | 44 | |||
2011–12 | Women's Premiership | 2nd | 50 | |||
2012–13 | Women's Premiership | 6th | 26 | |||
2013–14 | Women's Premiership | 2nd | 62 | |||
2014–15 | Women's Premiership | 1st | 59 | |||
2015–16 | Women's Premiership | 2nd | 61 | Runners–up | ||
2016–17 | Women's Premiership | 4th | 45 | Semi–finals | ||
2017–18 | Tyrrells Premier 15s | 1st | 79 | Champions | ||
2018–19 | Tyrrells Premier 15s | 1st | 84 | Champions | ||
2019–20 | Tyrrells Premier 15s | 1st | 59 | Season annulled[lower-alpha 2] | ||
2020–21 | Allianz Premier 15s | 1st | 79 | Runners–up | ||
2021–22 | Allianz Premier 15s | 1st | 77 | Champions | Allianz Cup | 6th place |
2022–23 | Allianz Premier 15s | 3rd | 75 | Semi–finals | Allianz Cup | Runners–up |
Gold background denotes champions
Silver background denotes runners-up
Pink background denotes relegated
Notes
- StoneX Stadium capacity can be increased up to 15,000 with temporary seating.
- The 2019–20 season was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[75]
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